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IEEE 802.16j Relay-Based Wireless Access Networks VASKEN GENC, SEAN MURPHY, YANG YU, AND JOHN MURPHY, UNIVERSITY COLLEGE DUBLIN SCHOOL OF COMPUTER SCIENCE.

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Presentation on theme: "IEEE 802.16j Relay-Based Wireless Access Networks VASKEN GENC, SEAN MURPHY, YANG YU, AND JOHN MURPHY, UNIVERSITY COLLEGE DUBLIN SCHOOL OF COMPUTER SCIENCE."— Presentation transcript:

1 IEEE 802.16j Relay-Based Wireless Access Networks VASKEN GENC, SEAN MURPHY, YANG YU, AND JOHN MURPHY, UNIVERSITY COLLEGE DUBLIN SCHOOL OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND INFORMATICS IEEE Wireless Communications October 2008 Speaker : Tsung-Yin Lee

2 2 Outline Introduction IEEE 802.16j Standardization Activity IEEE 802.16j Specifications Relay Modes Physical Layer MAC layer Summary

3 3 Introduction Multihop wireless systems have the potential to offer improved coverage and capacity over single-hop radio access systems One such initiative is the IEEE 802.16j standardization activity, adding relay capabilities to IEEE 802.16 systems

4 802.16 family StandardParts of Feature 802.16d-2004 Fixed Broadband Wireless Access, QoS  Real-Time : UGS, rtPS  Non-Real-Time : nrtPS, BE 802.16e-2005 Mobile support, 60~120 km/h, UL/DL 4/46Mbps, QoS  ertPS 802.16jRelay (Relay Station (RS) costs lower than Base Station (BS)) 802.16m MIMO, 350 km/h, UL/DL 200/350 Mbps, QoS  aGP 4

5 5 IEEE 802.16j Standardization Activity BS using multihop techniques and addressing coverage hole problems (e.g., shadows of buildings) Increased system capacity can be achieved through use of multiple links with greater efficiency

6 Use cases for 802.16j 6

7 Comparison of 802.16j and 802.16e-2005 capabilities 7

8 8 Relay Modes Transparent mode (T_RS) the RSs do not forward framing information lower complexity, and only operates in a centralized scheduling mode (two hops) Non-transparent mode (NT_RS) RSs generate their own framing information or forward those provided by the BS support larger coverage areas

9 Comparison between transparent and non-transparent modes of operation 9

10 10 Physical Layer Specifications In both transparent and non-transparent modes, so- called access zones are defined that support BS/NT_RS communications with the MS/T_RS In the transparent mode a so-called transparent zone is defined for T_RS communications with the MS In non-transparent mode relay zones are defined for BS/NT_RS communications with NT_RS BS T_RS NT_RS MS NT_RS/MS access zonestransparent zones relay zones transparent mode non-transparent mode access zones

11 11 Frame structure in transparent relay mode As transparent mode only supports two-hop topologies, it is only necessary to have a single access zone and one transparent zone in both the DL and UL

12 Transparent mode frame structure as viewed at the BS 12 BS T_RS MS transparent zones access zones

13 Transparent mode frame structure as viewed at the RS 13 BS T_RS MS transparent zones access zones

14 14 Frame structure in non- transparent relay mode As both the BS and RS can transmit frame headers, some synchronization issues arise arise: the standard stipulates that both must be synchronized to transmit the frame preamble at the same time

15 Non-transparent mode frame structure as viewed at the BS 15 Two-hop case scheduling BS-RS communications BS NT_RS MS relay zones access zones

16 Non-transparent mode frame structure as viewed at the RS 16 Two-hop case BS NT_RS MS relay zones access zones

17 17 Forwarding Scheme tunnel-based scheme provides support for explicit tunnels characterized by a unique CID, two specific endpoints, and QoS requirements connection ID (CID)-based scheme supports only the legacy management and transport connections as defined in the 802.16e- 2005 standard

18 Tunnel-Based Scheme Relay MAC header is removed when the packet arrives at the destination RS aggregate traffic from disparate MSs on the BS- RS connection for either management or transport connections with similar QoS requirements 18

19 CID-Based Scheme The packets are forwarded based on the CID of the destination station In centralized scheduling the BS sends a message to the RSs describing the relay link channel characteristics In the distributed case the RS has knowledge of the QoS requirements of each connection and can therefore make its own scheduling decisions 19

20 The embedded path management approach a hierarchical CID allocation scheme is used in the system The BS allocates CIDs to its subordinate stations no specific routing table in each RS, and a reduced need for signaling to update 20

21 The explicit path management approach end-to-end signaling mechanism to distribute the routing table along the path Each path is identified by a path ID to which the CIDs are bound BS may include the QoS requirement and the RSs to make an independent decision regarding how to schedule the packet in (distributed scheduling mode) 21

22 MS initial ranging in transparent mode relay The RSs monitor the ranging channel in the UL access zone and forward the ranging codes they receive to the BS The BS waits a specified time for other messages with the same ranging code — from other RSs — and then determines the most appropriate path for the station 22

23 MS initial ranging in non- transparent mode the MSs choose the BS or NT_RS with the strongest preamble detected In the centralized case this involves communicating all ranging information back to the BS In the distributed case the RS handles the ranging functions and simply makes a network entry query of the BS 23

24 RS initial ranging the BS (or NT_RS) can determine if a node performing ranging is an RS based on the ranging code In this way transparent mode RSs can easily ignore ranging performed by other RSs 24

25 RS network entry After the initial ranging, authentication, and registration processes, the BS may request the RS to determine the signal strength of each of its neighboring RSs and forward it to the BS configuration of the RS parameters, including its operation mode (e.g., transparent or non transparent) and scheduling mode 25

26 Design options of 802.16j systems 26

27 27 Summary IEEE 802.16j offers a potential solution to some of the classic problems in deployment of radio access networks Comprising low-cost relays associated with BSs, they can be used both to realize larger coverage areas for BSs and to increase capacity for congested areas


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